The Flower of the Chapdelaines eBook

“Ho!” Beloiseau rejoined, “au
contraire, he’s an advantage! If only
you keep him for the back-ground; biccause in
the mind of every-body tha’z where he
is, and that way he has the advantage to ril-ate those
storie’ together and——­”

Mademoiselle came. Her arrival, reception, installation
near the hostess and opposite Chester are good enough
untold. If elsewhere in that wide city a like
number ever settled down to listen to an untamed writer’s
manuscript in as sweet content with one another their
story ought to be printed. “Well,”
Mme. Castanado chanted, “commence.”
And Chester read:

X

THE ANGEL OF THE LORD

When I was twenty-four I lived at the small capital
of my native Southern State.

My parental home was three counties distant.
My father, a slaveholding planter, was a noble gentleman,
whom I loved as he loved me. But we could not
endure each other’s politics and I was trying
to exist on my professional fees, in the law office
of one of our ex-governors. I was kindly tolerated
by everybody about me but had neglected social relations,
being a black sheep on every hot question of the time—­1860.

In the world’s largest matters my Southern mother
had the sanest judgment I ever knew, and it was from
her I had absorbed my notions on slavery. It
was at least as much in sympathy for the white man
as for the black that she deprecated it, yet she pointed
out to me how idle it was to fancy that any mere manumission
of our slaves would cure us of a whole philosophy
of wealth, society, and government as inbred as it
was antiquated.

One evening my two fellow boarders—­state-house
clerks, good boys—­so glaringly left me
out of their plan for a whole day’s fishing on
the morrow, that I smarted. I was so short of
money that I could not have supplied my own tackle,
but no one knew that, and it stung me to be slighted
by two chaps I liked so well. I determined to
be revenged in some playful way that would make us
better friends, and as I walked down-street next morning
I hit out a scheme. They had been gone since
daybreak and I was on my way to see a client who kept
a livery-stable.

Now, in college, where I had intended to leave all
silly tricks behind me, my most taking pranks had
been played in female disguise; for at twenty-four
I was as beardless as a child.

My errand to the stableman was to collect some part
of my fee in a suit I had won for him. But I
got not a cent, for as to cash his victory had been
a barren one. However, a part of his booty was
an old coach built when carriage people made long
journeys in their own equipages. This he would
“keep on sale for me free of charge,” etc.

“Which means you’ll never sell it,”
I said.

Oh, he could sell it if any man could!

I smiled. Could he lend me, I asked, for half
a day or so, a good span of horses? He could.